THE PRACTITIONER’S COMPANION
Friday 26 June 2026

Housing must be pivotal in improving Australia’s productivity

Commission chair says she 'recommends a target, in the manner of a fiscal target, to create accountability'.

Published June 26, 2026 3 min read
Productivity Commission chair Danielle Wood.

LIFTING Australia’s productivity levels will require a broad reform agenda, with housing, regulation and business investment key priorities.

This is the view of Productivity Commission chair Danielle Wood, who added when it comes to housing, “we’ve known for a long time, supply matters… planning reforms are a big barrier”.

Speaking in a podcast for Westpac, Wood said addressing regulatory burden would be critical to improving productivity outcomes, particularly as businesses face increasing compliance costs.

“You need that leadership piece to say we are really serious about this,” Wood said.

“Once you get that message, it starts to filter through all the government departments and regulators.”

She also pointed to the need for clearer accountability.

“We recommend a target, in the manner of a fiscal target, to create accountability,” Wood said.

However, she acknowledged reform is challenging, with ongoing pressure to add more regulation.

“There’s always going to be pressure to add more regulation,” she said, adding governments need to be willing to “prune what’s already there and let things go”.

Discussing the Federal Budget, Wood said much of the public debate has focused on tax changes, despite a broader set of productivity measures being introduced.

She pointed to measures across housing, migration and competition policy, while noting implementation will be key to delivering outcomes.

“There’s a reason some of these things haven’t been done. Some of it’s pretty hard to implement,” Wood said, adding that “doing that type of reform in a revenue neutral way is really hard”.

Australia’s productivity slowdown reflects a mix of global trends and domestic factors, including structural shifts, weaker investment and slower gains from technology, she said.

Speaking to CommBank Chief Economist Luke Yeaman on the latest episode of CommBank View: Economics & Markets, Wood said productivity growth has been “pretty disappointing” over the last two decades, noting Australia’s slowdown became more pronounced in recent years.

Wood pointed to structural changes in the economy, including a shift toward services, particularly labour-intensive care services, alongside weak business investment that has not recovered since 2008.

Weaker business dynamism was also highlighted as a factor weighing on productivity.

Artificial intelligence could deliver a meaningful boost, though outcomes will depend on how widely it is adopted and implemented across the economy.

“Our estimate was that AI could add four per cent to labour productivity over the decade,” Wood said. “It is meaningful and… not much else is going to give you something of that magnitude.”

Wood added that productivity gains will depend on how businesses embed the technology into operations, with Australia lagging its peers in the US, UK and Canada on adoption.

“The benefits obviously only come once you adopt it… but it’s also about moving past the shallow adoption of AI, from using it to write better emails, take meeting minutes, to using it for the fundamental reconfiguration of businesses, processes and products,” she said.

Other ECONOMIC OUTLOOK